The movie is implicit. Mr. Church does not express what kind of person he is through an intuitive description, but uses a lot of sides: Mr. Church's recipe, Mr. Church's patience, his mother's funeral Weeping and dying in bed in silence, only when drunk do I shout out the bitterness and pain of my youth. Like a jigsaw puzzle, full of doubts like the heroine, the viewer slowly pieced together a complete Mr. Church through the camera. There are so many things that touched me in the film: my mother had cancer, even though Mr. Church did almost all the chores, and "I" still hated helping her take a bath, that line made a deep impression on me - "My sun is on fire. "That sentence brought tears to my eyes. How ruthless the continuation of life is, the person who once trusted her/his hand and walked through countless streets, lay weakly on the bed, no matter whether I approached or walked away, I was afraid that her breathing would worsen or Lessened, and most painfully, there was nothing I could do about it. The sun is on fire!
Mr Church said: "A little boy has been chasing ladybugs for a long time, chasing after chasing, he has become an adult and came to a strange house with the most beautiful woman and the cutest little girl in the world. Ladybug The bug was gone, they asked her to stay, and he agreed." The ladybug chasing, the drunken complaint, the letter to Xiao Xia after she passed away, the pain and bitterness that she couldn't understand with her father, were all taken by Church. Mr. rubbed into the daily food and the sound of the piano, life was flowing in the silence, and the gentle wind gently smoothed it. The arrangement of love, friendship, and salvation in the play strikes me as a little pompous and dramatic, too idealistic.
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